Abstract

Effective small specimen tests are needed to obtain fracture toughness and elastic properties as the limited availability of irradiated graphite restricts the quantity and dimensions of test specimens. Both properties have evaluated simultaneously in a crack propagation test with the double cleavage drilled compression (DCDC) specimen geometry of a fine-grained graphite (SNG742) that has non-linear elastic properties in the unirradiated condition. Three-dimensional displacement fields were obtained by digital volume correlation of in situ laboratory X-ray computed tomographs, and the 3D crack geometry (crack tip position, crack opening displacements and angle) was determined objectively by a wavelet variance method. The tensile softening of the Young modulus was determined by inverse analysis of the strain field using the finite element model updating (FEMU) method. The strain energy release rate of the quasi-static propagating crack was calculated using the contour integral method in a finite element model with the derived non-linear elastic properties and the measured displacements as boundary conditions. The critical strain energy release rate was constant with crack length (118 ± 14 J m−2) and equivalent to a fracture toughness of 1.13 ± 0.07 MPa m1/2.

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